Burchard, archbishop & count of Vienne

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Burchard, archbishop & count of Vienne

Also Known As: "Brochard", "Bouchard"
Birthdate:
Death: August 20, 1031
Immediate Family:

Son of Anselm II, Bishop of Aosta and Aldiud
Brother of Anselm III, bishop of Aosta; Odalric and Auxilia
Half brother of Burchard, archbishop of Lyon

Managed by: Livio Scremin
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Immediate Family

About Burchard, archbishop & count of Vienne

Burchard (died 20 August 1031) was the archbishop of Vienne from 1001 until his death. He was also the count of the Viennois from 1023, the first bishop of Vienne to hold secular power in the county simultaneously.

Burchard belonged to the Anselmid lineage. He was the eldest son of Anselm (died after 1002), a nobleman described in documents as an "illustrious man" (vir inluster), and his wife, Aldiud,[b] who had been the concubine, about 964, of King Conrad of Burgundy. Anselm and Aldiud were married around 970. Burchard's younger brothers were Anselm, bishop of Aosta, and Ulric, who was married to a woman named Girelda.[2] In addition, the woman named Ancilla[c] who married Count Humbert I of Savoy was probably Burchard's sister.[3] In early 1019, Burchard removed Humbert as advocatus of the archdiocese of Vienne and gave the position to his brother Ulric.[4] On 19 August 1019, Burchard and his brother Ulric donated land in the Genevois to the church of Saint Peter in Vienne for the sake of their parents' souls.[5]

Through his mother, Burchard was the half-brother of Archbishop Burchard II of Lyon, Conrad's illegitimate son. He probably owed his election to the see of Vienne to royal preferment.[2] On 14 September 1023, King Rudolf III and Queen Ermengard granted the county of the Viennois to the archbishop of Vienne. With this acquisition, Burchard controlled the fiscal lands of the county as well as its castle. Rudolf had previously bestowed the county, along with that of Sermorens, on Ermengard in 1011, shortly after their marriage. The county of Sermorens was not ceded to the archbishop.[6] The French historian Georges de Manteyer advanced the theory that Burchard created the counties of Maurienne and Albon out of the Viennois and enfeoffed them to the families that would be the Savoyards and Dauphins in 1023.[7]


-http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/burgkgenev.htm#AnselmMAldiud

c) BOUCHARD (-after 19 Aug [1019]). According to Europäische Stammtafeln[295], Aldiud and her husband were grandparents of Anselm Bishop of Aosta, Bouchard Archbishop of Vienne and Udalrich, advocatus of the church of Vienne. This is a mistake as the charters quoted below indicate that the couple were the parents, not grandparents, of the brothers. Archbishop of Vienne . Rudolf III King of Burgundy donated property to Vienne Saint-Maurice, at the request of "Irmengarda regina, Burkardo Lugdunensi archiepiscopo fratre suo, nec non Burchardo Viennensi archiepiscopo", by charter dated 1 Aug 1011[296]. A charter dated 19 Aug [1019] of "Burchardus sancta Viennensis archiepiscopus et Udolricus frater meus et advocatus meus" granted property "in pago Genevensi…in villa Marischa…a circio Lemani lacus" made "pro remedio animarum…genitore nostro Anselmo sive pro genetrice nostra Aaldui"[297].


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